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US Supreme Court won't hear Florida cop killer's appeal

Kathy Laskowski, South Florida Sun Sentinel on

Published in News & Features

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to take up an appeal by a man sentenced to death for killing an Orlando police officer in 2017.

The Supreme Court, as is common, did not explain its decision for turning down a petition filed by an attorney for Markeith Loyd, who was convicted in the murder of police Lt. Debra Clayton. Loyd shot Clayton after she spotted him in a Walmart store while he faced an arrest warrant in the murder of Sade Dixon, who had been pregnant with his child.

The petition to the Supreme Court contended that a prosecutor misled jurors about seeking unanimity in their deliberations about Loyd’s sentence.

“Specifically, this (U.S. Supreme) Court disallows argument that misleads jurors as to the role they play under local law in the capital sentencing process, and misleads them in a way that allows them to feel less responsible than they should for the life-or-death decision,” the petition said. “Here that line was crossed. The prosecutor argued that the jurors should, or must, do their best to achieve unanimity as to the ultimate question before them, a position inconsistent with Florida’s substantive law.”

 

The Florida Supreme Court rejected that argument and others in a November decision.

In 2017, Florida lawmakers passed a measure to require unanimous jury recommendations before defendants could be sentenced to death, though they eliminated the unanimity requirement in 2023.


©2024 South Florida Sun Sentinel. Visit at sun-sentinel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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